Last reviewed: 7 May 2026By Eco Home Check Editorial Team
The best solar panels for most UK homes in 2026 are monocrystalline models from SunPower, LONGi, or JA Solar, depending on your budget and roof space. A typical 4kW system costs £5,000 to £7,500, and while there's no direct solar panel grant for most homeowners, ECO4 can fund the full cost if you're on qualifying benefits. Everyone else saves through 0% VAT and Smart Export Guarantee payments.
Here's our comparison of the top panels available in the UK right now, followed by the detail you actually need to make a decision.
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Efficiency. That's the single number that matters most if you've got a normal UK roof.
A panel rated at 22% efficiency converts 22% of the sunlight hitting it into electricity. Sounds modest, but five years ago the standard was 18-19%, so we've come a long way. The practical difference between a 20% panel and a 24% panel on a typical semi-detached house in, say, Nottingham? About 600-800 kWh per year extra. That's roughly £150 to £200 off your annual bill at current Ofgem rates.
But efficiency isn't everything. Here's what else separates a good panel from a mediocre one:
Temperature coefficient. Panels lose output as they heat up. The best panels lose around 0.26% per degree above 25°C. Cheaper ones lose 0.35% or more. On a hot July day when your roof hits 55°C, that difference adds up. British summers are getting warmer, so this matters more than it used to.
Degradation rate. Every panel loses a tiny fraction of output each year. Premium panels guarantee 92% output after 25 years. Budget panels might only guarantee 84%. Over a 30-year lifespan, that's the difference between a system that still earns its keep and one that's basically decorative.
Warranty length. SunPower offers 40 years. Most others offer 25. Some budget panels still ship with 12-year product warranties, which is a red flag in 2026. If a manufacturer won't stand behind their panel for 25 years, ask yourself why.
Honestly, the panels themselves are the most reliable component in your system. Inverters fail. Roof brackets corrode. But the actual cells? They just quietly work. So when we say "best," we're really talking about which panels give you the most electricity per square metre of roof for the longest time.
The Best Solar Panels Available in the UK Right Now
SunPower Maxeon 7
The panel we'd put on our own house if money weren't an issue.
SunPower's Maxeon cells use a completely different architecture from conventional panels. The electrical contacts sit behind the cell rather than on top, which means no metal grid lines blocking sunlight. The result: 24.1% efficiency, the highest of any residential panel you can buy in the UK today. Their 40-year warranty is unmatched, and their degradation guarantee (88.25% at year 40) means these panels will outlast your roof.
The catch? Cost. A full SunPower system runs about 20-30% more than an equivalent LONGi or JA Solar setup. For a 4kW system, you're looking at £7,000 to £9,000 installed. We've covered the full breakdown of solar panel costs separately, but the premium is real.
Who should buy them: anyone with a small south-facing roof who needs maximum output from limited space, or anyone who plans to stay in their home for 20+ years and wants the longest possible payback.
LONGi Hi-MO 7
The sweet spot for most UK homes.
LONGi is the world's largest solar panel manufacturer, and their Hi-MO 7 range hits 22.5% efficiency at a price point that makes the maths work for most people. They use HPC (Hybrid Passivated Contact) cell technology, which is a step up from standard PERC cells without the price premium of SunPower's back-contact design.
What we like: excellent low-light performance (important in a country where overcast days outnumber sunny ones roughly three to one), strong temperature coefficient, and wide UK installer availability. Octopus Energy's solar arm installs LONGi as standard, as do several of the larger MCS-certified networks.
A 4kW LONGi system typically costs £5,500 to £6,800 installed.
JA Solar DeepBlue 4.0
If your budget is tight, JA Solar offers genuinely good panels at the lowest price point we'd recommend.
22% efficiency. 25-year product warranty. Available through most UK installers. Nothing flashy, nothing wrong with them. They won't win efficiency contests against SunPower, but on a standard 4-bedroom detached house with plenty of roof space, the difference in annual output between JA Solar and LONGi is maybe 200 kWh. That's about £50 a year. Over 25 years it adds up, but so does the lower upfront cost.
A 4kW JA Solar system runs £4,800 to £6,200 installed.
Canadian Solar and Trina Solar
Both solid mid-range options. Canadian Solar's HiKu7 panels are physically large (600W+), which makes them brilliant for ground-mount systems or big commercial-style roofs but awkward on a typical terraced house. Trina's Vertex S+ is a genuine all-rounder that competes directly with LONGi on specs and price.
We wouldn't steer anyone away from either brand, but neither offers a compelling reason to choose them over LONGi unless your installer has a specific supply relationship that gets you a better deal.
Which Solar Panel Type Suits Your Roof and Budget?
Right, so there are three types of solar panel, but in practice you're choosing between two.
Monocrystalline panels dominate the UK market and account for over 95% of new residential installations. Every panel in our comparison table above is monocrystalline. They're more efficient, better in low light, and the price gap with polycrystalline has essentially disappeared.
Polycrystalline panels (the blueish ones) still exist but there's no good reason to install them on a UK home in 2026. They're less efficient, they look worse, and the cost saving is negligible. If an installer quotes you polycrystalline panels, ask why.
Thin-film panels are the third type, and they're genuinely interesting for specific situations: listed buildings where you need panels that look like roof slates, or very low-pitch roofs where rigid panels won't work. But they're about 30-40% less efficient than monocrystalline, so you need significantly more roof space. For most homes, they're not the right answer.
Here's what actually determines which panel suits your roof:
Small roof (under 20m²). Go premium. SunPower or the highest-efficiency LONGi panels. You need every watt per square metre.
Medium roof (20-35m²). The sweet spot for LONGi or Trina. You've got enough space that you don't need to pay the SunPower premium, but you'll still benefit from 22%+ efficiency.
Large roof (35m²+). JA Solar or Canadian Solar. When space isn't a constraint, the cost-per-watt calculation favours budget panels. You can just install more of them.
North-facing or heavily shaded roof. Honestly? Consider whether solar is the right investment at all. A north-facing roof generates roughly 55-60% of what a south-facing one produces. If you've only got a north-facing option, a heat pump might give you better returns on the same budget. But if you've got east-west split, that's fine, you'll still generate about 85% of south-facing output.
How Much Can You Save With Solar Panels in 2026?
£800 to £1,100 per year. That's the realistic saving for a 4kW system on a south-facing roof in central England, assuming you use about 50% of the electricity yourself and export the rest.
Let me break that down because the numbers matter.
A 4kW system in the Midlands generates approximately 3,400-3,800 kWh per year, according to MCS data. At Ofgem's current price cap rate of 24.5p per kWh, every unit you use yourself saves you 24.5p. Every unit you export earns you between 3p and 15p depending on your Smart Export Guarantee tariff. Octopus pays 15p on their Agile export tariff. British Gas pays about 12p. Some of the smaller suppliers offer as little as 3p, which is frankly insulting.
Wait, I said £800 to £1,100. The higher figure comes from homes that shift more consumption to daytime (running the dishwasher, washing machine, and EV charger during peak generation) or add a battery to store surplus. A 5kWh battery typically pushes self-consumption from 50% to 70-80%, which transforms the economics.
Payback period on a mid-range system? Seven to nine years for most homes. After that, it's essentially free electricity for another 15-20 years. The full cost picture, including installation, scaffolding, and electrical work, is covered in our solar power cost guide.
One aside that's worth mentioning: panels installed in 2026 will almost certainly outlast the current energy price structure. Nobody knows what electricity will cost in 2040. But the trend is upward, and every unit you generate yourself is a unit you don't buy at whatever future price the market lands on. That's not a guarantee of savings, it's a hedge against uncertainty. Anyway.
Can You Get a Grant to Help Cover the Cost of Solar?
No direct solar panel grant exists for most UK homeowners in 2026. But three things can significantly reduce what you pay.
ECO4 is the big one. If your household receives qualifying benefits (Universal Credit, Pension Credit, Child Tax Credit, or several others) and your home has an EPC rating of D or below, ECO4 can fund the entire cost of a solar installation. Fully funded. No contribution from you. The scheme runs until December 2026 and we've written a complete guide to solar panel grants covering exactly who qualifies.
0% VAT applies to every domestic solar installation regardless of income. That's a saving of £1,000 to £1,500 on a typical system. Your installer should apply this automatically. If they charge you 20% VAT on a residential solar install, challenge it.
The Smart Export Guarantee isn't a grant, but it is guaranteed income. Every electricity supplier with more than 150,000 customers must offer you a tariff for your exported electricity. Rates vary wildly (Octopus Agile Export currently pays the most) but even the worst tariff puts money back in your pocket every quarter.
The Warm Homes: Local Grant scheme, which is open until 2028, can sometimes include solar panels as part of a broader energy efficiency package. Availability depends entirely on your local authority, so it's worth checking even if you don't think you'd qualify for ECO4. Our Warm Homes: Local Grant guide has the detail on how to apply through your council.
How to Choose a Trustworthy Solar Panel Installer
So you've picked a panel. The installer matters more.
Here's the honest bit: the difference between a good installation and a bad one isn't the panels. It's the mounting system, the cable routing, the inverter placement, and whether the installer actually designs the system for your specific roof rather than slapping a template layout on it. We see this constantly. Two identical panel brands, one system generates 15% more than the other because one installer bothered to account for a chimney shadow.
MCS certification is non-negotiable. Without it, you can't claim the Smart Export Guarantee, you can't benefit from ECO4 funding, and you have no meaningful recourse if something goes wrong. Check the MCS Installer Registry yourself rather than taking the installer's word for it.
Beyond MCS, here's what separates good installers from mediocre ones:
Get three quotes minimum. Not two. Three. The variation in UK solar quotes is genuinely shocking. We regularly see £3,000 differences for identical systems. Some of that is margin, some is different equipment, and some is installers pricing in their current workload (busy installers quote higher because they can afford to lose the job).
Ask about the inverter. The panels might last 25-40 years, but the inverter typically needs replacing after 10-15 years. Some installers include a cheap string inverter that costs £1,500 to replace. Others spec Enphase microinverters with 25-year warranties that eliminate this problem. The upfront cost is higher, but the lifetime cost often isn't.
Check their roof experience. A company that's installed 500 systems on pitched tile roofs might struggle with your flat rubber roof or your slate Victorian terrace. Ask for examples of similar installations.
Look at their aftercare. Who do you call if output drops in year 3? Some installers offer monitoring and maintenance packages. Others vanish after installation day. Neither is necessarily wrong, but know what you're getting.
And one thing most guides won't mention: ask whether they subcontract the electrical work or do it in-house. Subcontracted electricians sometimes arrive weeks after the panels go up, leaving you with a system on your roof that isn't connected to anything. In-house teams typically complete everything in one or two days.
Our solar panel installation guide covers the full process from survey to switch-on, including what to expect on installation day and what the common problems are.
Our Verdict
For most UK homes with a reasonable south or east-west facing roof, a LONGi Hi-MO 7 system installed by an MCS-certified company with Enphase microinverters represents the best balance of cost, performance, and longevity in 2026.
If you've got a small roof or you're planning to stay in your home for decades, SunPower justifies the premium. If budget is the primary constraint and you've got plenty of roof space, JA Solar will do the job well.
Don't overthink the panel choice. Spend your energy choosing the right installer instead. The panel is a commodity. The installation is custom engineering.
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Frequently asked questions
How long do solar panels actually last in the UK climate?
25 to 40 years depending on the brand. Premium panels like SunPower guarantee 88% output at year 40. Budget panels typically guarantee 84% at year 25. The UK climate (rain, wind, temperature cycling) doesn't significantly reduce lifespan compared to sunnier countries. Rain actually helps by keeping panels relatively clean, though [occasional cleaning does boost output](/guides/solar-panel-cleaning) by 3-5% if you're near trees or a busy road.
Do solar panels work on cloudy days?
Yes. They generate less, but they still work. A typical UK system produces about 50-60% of its rated output on overcast days. Modern monocrystalline panels with good low-light performance (LONGi and SunPower are particularly strong here) handle diffuse light better than older designs. You won't run your whole house on a grey December afternoon, but you'll still offset some grid consumption.
Can I install solar panels myself to save money?
Technically yes, but you'd lose access to the Smart Export Guarantee, ECO4 funding, and any warranty protection. You also can't self-certify the electrical connection under Part P building regulations. The MCS certification requirement alone makes DIY impractical for most people.
What's the difference between a 3kW, 4kW, and 5kW system?
A 3kW system (8-10 panels) suits a small house or flat with low daytime consumption and generates roughly 2,500-2,800 kWh per year. A 4kW system (10-12 panels) is the most common residential size, generating 3,400-3,800 kWh. A 5kW system (12-15 panels) makes sense if you have an EV, a heat pump, or high daytime consumption. Bigger isn't always better though. If you're exporting 70% of your generation because you're out all day, a smaller system with a battery often makes more financial sense than a larger system without one.
Will solar panels increase my home's value?
The evidence is mixed but generally positive. A 2023 study by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero found that solar panels add approximately £1,800 to £2,500 to a property's value per kW installed, though this varies enormously by region and buyer demand. They also improve your EPC rating, which matters increasingly for mortgage valuations.